Microsoft 365 deployment-Describe Microsoft 365 apps and services
As noted earlier, Microsoft 365 consists of multiple products. However, the process of deploying Microsoft 365 is not just a matter of obtaining licenses for these products and installing them. How the Microsoft 365 components work together to provide intelligent management, security, and collaboration requires that the deployment be undertaken as an integrated process.
The complexity of a Microsoft 365 enterprise deployment depends on the size of the existing enterprise, its needs, and the applications already running on it. Microsoft has defined three Microsoft 365 deployment strategies:
- FastTrack for Microsoft 365 FastTrack is a benefit included as part of a Microsoft 365 Enterprise subscription that provides ongoing support from Microsoft personnel, including a FastTrack manager, an engineer, and a migration engineer. These specialists divide the subscriber’s Microsoft 365 deployment into three stages, called Envision, Onboard, and Drive Value, enabling them to plan and deploy Microsoft 365 into the existing enterprise infrastructure and then help the organization’s people adapt their roles to the Microsoft 365 environment.
- Third-party services Microsoft partners and consulting services can provide help with a Microsoft 365 deployment at many levels, ranging from complete control of the operation to occasional support.
- Self-deployment The Microsoft 365 Enterprise deployment documentation defines a process in multiple phases for creating a viable Microsoft 365 installation, including Windows 10 or 11 Enterprise and the Office productivity applications. After that, the administrators can create workloads and scenarios specific to the organization, including Exchange Online, SharePoint, and Microsoft Teams.
The Microsoft 365 Enterprise deployment documentation breaks the foundation infrastructure—sometimes called a core deployment—into phases, as described in the following sections. Each phase is divided into steps or tasks that must be completed before the phase can be considered complete.
For a deployment in a relatively small or new organization that is just beginning to use Microsoft’s cloud-based products, following the phases of the deployment process in order will create a reliable structure for the workloads and scenarios to be deployed later. For an existing enterprise already using some of the Microsoft 365 components, some of the required tasks might already have been completed, and the phases do not have to be followed in an unbroken sequence. Administrators can approach the phases in any order they find practical if they meet the requirements for each phase.
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For more detailed coverage of the steps in each phase of the Microsoft 365 deployment process, as well as procedures for deploying Microsoft 365 workloads and scenarios, see the Deploy Microsoft 365 Enterprise documentation at https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/enterprise/?view=o365-worldwide.